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Culture War Roundup for the week of January 15, 2024

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All of them, or rather you're asking the wrong question, I'm talking about the entire framework you're applying, not a specific dimension.

This is what I think is the fundamental flaw in rationalism and adjacent movements, the framework of natural sciences, where you compare the outcomes after juggling a few specific parameters is not adequate for politics, or really any topic dealing with purposeful human action.

When the question is "why do some things float, and some things sink" you can take a bunch off things and play the game of "is it weight? Hm... No this thing is heavy and didn't sink" because you can rely on the assumption that laws of physics are applied the same way to all objects, and even then it took physicist ages to come up with a reliable model of reality, and even that model has a ton of caveats and unexplained stuff.

When the question is "was being a victim of a conspiracy theory a factor in the applied punishment" it makes no sense say "plenty of other convicted J6 defendants avoided jail time despite not being the subject of a conspiracy theory" because laws of men are not laws physics, and aren't applied the same to all cases.

This entire way of attempting to answer the question in these domains is simply unproductive.